Top 34 Quotes & Sayings by Steve Alford

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American coach Steve Alford.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Steve Alford

Stephen Todd Alford is an American men's college basketball coach and former professional player who is the head coach for the Nevada Wolf Pack of the Mountain West Conference (MWC). Born and raised in Indiana, he was a two-time consensus first-team All-American as a college basketball player for the Indiana Hoosiers. He led them to a national championship in 1987. After playing professionally for four years in the National Basketball Association (NBA), he has been a college head coach for almost 30 years.

It's our job to put a good product out there, and fans will come. If they see a good product, a good style, fans will come.
There are certain people in our business that you don't replace - Bob Knight, Dean Smith, Mike Krzyzyewski, and you don't replace John Wooden, either.
My children see me being coach enough. I gotta make sure they see me being dad. — © Steve Alford
My children see me being coach enough. I gotta make sure they see me being dad.
Fans will come if you have a good product.
The Olympics is nothing I ever dreamed about. I dreamed about playing for Coach Knight and Indiana.
The majority of the Big Ten towns are college towns. The colleges are kind of what run the towns.
I never dreamed I would coach at UCLA. It was not one of those things in my coaching career I thought would happen. It's a tremendous blessing, and I'm going to make the most of it.
Jabari Parker is one of the best, if not the best, I've seen on tape. He's so hard to guard. You've got to guard from 23 feet. He can shoot it, or he can go one-on-one from there. He can post. He's so fast and long.
I've been in basketball a long time, and nobody is more of a competitor than I am.
I grew up in Indiana. My first four years of elementary were in the gym where Coach Wooden went to high school.
If you keep your eyes fixed on Christ, He's going to reward you.
You control what you do offensively, defensively. You're controlling who you play, how you want to play.
I got to work for some great administrators at great institutions, and I had an opportunity to coach great players. Iowa is no different.
I've said all along it's a humbling experience being at UCLA. Extremely proud, extremely blessed to be at an institution with all this tradition.
Sometimes it's forgotten that players are coming to college to get a degree.
One of the things you don't usually mess with is happy.
Christian, non-Christian, we're going to miss the mark. We're going to make mistakes. How you handle those mistakes and get more fundamentally sound spiritually in dealing with those mistakes I think have a direct impact - not only on your spiritual life, but those around you.
I don't know anything about the hotel business.
Every person has a different view of another person's image. That's all perception. The character of a man, the integrity, that's who you are.
The two places that I had most imprinted in my mind and in my memory were UCLA and Indiana. To play at one and coach at the other is unbelievable.
Everything that UCLA stands for, it's top of the food chain. So you either look at those things as burdens or you look at them as blessings. From day one, I've told my staff we're going to look at it as a blessing and do everything we can to build champions.
A freshman has only about 25% of his degree completed. They go off to play professional basketball, and to assume they will come back and get the degree done five, six, seven years later, I don't see that happening.
It's all about persevering. You know you're going to be tested. If you keep your eyes fixed on Christ, He's going to reward you.
There are very few LeBron James and Kobe Bryants.
When I was a freshman and sophomore, I got booed every time I was put in the game. Then, in my junior and senior years, my dad got booed every time he took me out. — © Steve Alford
When I was a freshman and sophomore, I got booed every time I was put in the game. Then, in my junior and senior years, my dad got booed every time he took me out.
I just go back to my roots. I was literally born 26 miles from Martinsville High School where Coach Wooden grew up, and then my dad coached there for four years.
It's been an unbelievable thing for me to walk Bruin Walk and walk past Coach Wooden's statue, a guy that when I was in elementary school, it's Coach Wooden winning his final championship, his 10th in 12 years.
I never in my wildest dreams thought I would get even one play at Indiana, let alone 25 years later, walk Bruin Walk, walk UCLA where Coach Wooden built his legacy.
That first group of Manchester players allowed me to enjoy coaching at a very young age that motivated me to do it. If it wasn't good, I might have made a career change.
I'm a Christian first. I'm a family guy second. As much as I like coaching, as much as I like basketball, it's third, fourth, or fifth down the line.
I feel blessed that I had an opportunity to be in the Big Ten for four years as a player and be in the Big Ten as a coach for eight years. To get 12 years in a conference like the Big Ten - it's a first-class league with great towns and great fans.
When I played with Michael Jordan on the Olympic team, there was a huge gap between his ability and the ability of the other great players on that team. But what impressed me was that he was always the first one on the floor and the last one to leave.
You create shots for yourself by what you do without the ball more than what you do after you get it
We try to stress the little things because little things lead to big things.
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